Available Formats
Begars Abbey
By (Author) V.L. Valentine
Profile Books Ltd
Viper
5th July 2022
28th April 2022
Main
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Classic horror and ghost stories
813.6
Hardback
336
Width 142mm, Height 222mm, Spine 34mm
445g
A dark house filled with darker secrets...
Winter 1954, and in a dilapidated apartment in Brooklyn, Sam Cooper realises that she has nothing left. Her mother is dead, she has no prospects, and she cannot afford the rent. But as she goes through her mother's things, Sam finds a stack of hidden letters that reveal a family and an inheritance that she never knew she had, three thousand miles away in Yorkshire.
Begars Abbey is a crumbling pile, inhabited only by Sam's crippled grandmother, Lady Cooper, a housekeeper and a handful of servants. Sam cannot understand why her mother kept its very existence a secret, but her diaries offer a glimpse of a young girl growing increasingly terrified. As is Sam herself.
Built on the foundations of an old convent, Begars moves and sings with the biting wind. Her grandmother cannot speak, and a shadowy woman moves along the corridors at night. For there are dark places in the hidden tunnels beneath Begars. And they will not give up their secrets easily...
Perfect for readers of Laura Purcell and Natasha Pulley, Begars Abbey will keep you up at night.
'Takes its reader to a sinister place and locks them in, all alone. A dark, gothic delight best enjoyed by the light of a single, flickering candle' - Janice Hallett, author of The Appeal
'An inventive, lavish, twisty ghost story that will keep you guessing and turning the pages until the very end. Atmospheric and hugely enjoyable' - Alison Littlewood, author of Mistletoe
'An atmospheric, spine-tingling page-turner packed with curious characters and sinister twists' - Jennifer Ryan
'A shiver-down-the-spine jaunt into the gruesome past, with a deliciously creepy finale' - C.E. Rose
'Wonderful... High gothic with a captivating protagonist. Loved it' - Rhiannon Ward, author of The Quickening
V.L. Valentine is a senior science editor at National Public Radio in Washington, D.C., where she has led award-winning coverage of global disease outbreaks including Covid-19, Ebola and the Zika virus. She has a master's in the history of medicine from University College London and her non-fiction work has been published by NPR, The New York Times, The Smithsonian Channel and Science Magazine. Her debut novel, The Plague Letters, was published in 2021.